Thursday, July 2, 2015

Event Update For 2015-07-01

The seas, lakes and oceans are now pluming deadly hydrogen sulfide and suffocating methane. Hydrogen sulfide is a highly toxic water-soluble heavier-than-air gas and will accumulate in low-lying areas. Methane is slightly more buoyant than normal air and so will be all around, but will tend to contaminate our atmosphere from the top down. These gases are sickening and killing oxygen-using life all around the world, including human life, as our atmosphere is increasingly poisoned. Because both gases are highly flammable and because our entire civilization is built around fire and flammable fuels, this is leading to more fires and explosions. This is an extinction level event and will likely decimate both the biosphere and human population and it is debatable whether humankind can survive this event.

A. More fires and more explosions, especially along the coasts, but everywhere generally.
B. Many more animal die-offs, of all kinds, and especially oceanic species.
C. More multiples of people will be found dead in their homes, as if they'd dropped dead.
D. More corpses found in low-lying areas, all over the world.
E. More unusual vehicular accidents.
F. Improved unemployment numbers as people die off.

Quote: "A continuous flow of smoke and ashes from a swamp at a place near Old Wahong village of Manipur's Ukhrul district has left villagers fearing of natural calamity in the form of volcanic eruption any time, a daily reported Tuesday. Villagers said that smoke radius of about two feet along with ashes have been seen gushing out from the earth's surface at Shitru area, since last two weeks."

Quote: "A mysterious underground fire has created numerous sink-holes that emit smoke and gas in a nearby forest of Old Wahong Village in Northern Ukhrul."

Quote: "According to villagers, the inferno had so far engulfed an area of about 40 sq ft creating various sink-holes on the ground at a nearby forest areas locally known as Sitru located about 1 km toward south of Old Wahong habitation. They said that the locals came to know of the mysterious phenomenon after a 16-year old boy Wisdom accidentally slipped his foot into the ground while venturing into the forest with a friend around the end of May last. He sustained grievous burn injuries on his left foot."

Note: More underground fires. Hydrogen sulfide is a heavier-than-air gas which will tend to flow to low-lying areas, like underground facilities. It's also reactive with rust and electrified copper, so it's causing problems with electrical infrastructure, including the wiring in vehicles of all kinds. But methane and hydrogen sulfide are also coming up FROM the ground, thus those methane explosion craters in Siberia in the last year, and the hydrogen sulfide they found six feet down in the soil near Chinchilla (Australia) last year. So the ground itself may simply ignite or explode here and there, as with the ground burning at that village in India. Both gases are also water-soluble, thus the river on fire in China and the burning lake in India. Once that huge methane clathrate deposit off the US East Coast really gets going we may see the ocean itself ignite, and if it does then we may never be able to put that fire out. Eventually the oxygen levels in the atmosphere will drop so low that all the fires around the world will sputter out, but we'll be long gone by then, since we need oxygen too...

Quote: "Both homes sustained severe damage. Neighbor Thao Ly called the fire 'devastating.' But a mystery remains - what was the explosion so many people say they heard? There were no reports of fireworks in the area and officials still are trying to determine what sparked the blaze."

Quote: "The initial explosion reports came in around 9:40 p.m. Wednesday. Neighbors said it originated from Pitsch Companies, 675 Richmond St. NW. The company provides salvage, demolition and environmental services."

Quote: "There were no injuries, and no one was inside the building when the fire started."

Quote: "Grant County officials say at least five structures and several vehicles burned late Tuesday and early Wednesday as the flames raced through dry sagebrush and grasses about two miles east of Quincy. The fire marshal's office says no homes have been lost, but several are threatened."

Quote: "Robin Cameron, one of the residents who fled from the flames, said she was terrified as she grabbed her little dog and ran from her home. 'It was huge walls of flame, like in the movies,' she said. 'It was like one of those doomsday movies, and it was right there - I could feel the heat.'"

Quote: "It appears that Canada is in for a rather long and arduous wildfire season. As of this moment, there are hundreds of fires raging in Alberta, BC, and the Northwest Territories. A stunning satellite image shows just how much of that smoke is darkening skies across the US."

Quote: "A sailing boat with six Belgians on board had caught fire off the coast of Cala Jondal, the Diario de Ibiza reported. The boat caught fire in the open sea. The six people were all rescued. A distress call was received at around 5.30pm, saying the boat was on fire. The people on board and a dog were rescued by nearby boats. The passengers were not able to put the fire out, which led to the boat sinking."

Quote: "The Minatare fire department was kept busy with three fires Wednesday, including a boat fire at Lake Minatare around 5:40 p.m. Minatare Fire Chief Tom Case says his personnel used a floater pump to get most of the fire out on the water. Then a rope was tied to the boat to pull it to shore."

Note: These are the 581st and 582nd boats or ships to burn/explode in 2015...

Quote: "Fire crews were called out to two lorry fires on Wednesday. The first incident, at 11am, involved an HGV on the hard shoulder of the M6 northbound between junctions 32 and 33, while the second was an articulated lorry in Moneyclose Lane, Heysham, on its way to Heysham Port."

Quote: "The vehicle is ablaze in the backyard of a home on Gabaldon Drive, which meets Mountain Road near the river."

Note: About 1000 feet east (downwind) of the Rio Grande. Here's a Google Maps link of the area. Three high school students collapsed to the ground with seizures and foaming at the mouth near the Rio Grande in El Paso (Texas), mentioned in the 2013-06-04 update. Quite a few people have been found dead in the Rio Grande too...

Quote: "It happened in the 500 block of E. Vine just before 3AM. Witnesses on scene say they could hear explosions coming from the flaming building. The family at the house did vacate the premises to be safe. Firefighters tell Newschannel 3 two cars in the garage were destroyed and they say there were several gas cans in the garage that may have exploded."

Quote: "San Antonio police spokesman Sgt. Javier Salazar said it appears a man was walking or jogging along the river and may have had a medical episode and fell into the river. There were no signs of trauma and foul play is not suspected, Salazar said."

Quote: "San Antonio Police spokesman Sgt. Javier Salazar said the man was wearing athletic attire, leading officials to believe he may have fallen into the river while jogging or walking."

Note: If this sounds familiar, it's because another man was just found dead along the River Walk in San Antonio, at 1 AM, mentioned in the 2015-06-26 update...

Quote: "Park Enforcement Officers patrolling near the lake had been watching the deranged man from a distance as he paced around aimlessly at 11am. Eventually, the unidentified man decided that the best way to stay cool would be to shed his clothes and go for a refreshing dip."

Quote: "The shark pulled the man under the water, and the swimmer sustained bites to his rib cage, hip, lower leg and both hands, she said. The man was conscious and talking and was flown to a hospital for treatment. 'There was a big trail of blood from the water to the sand,' witness Stephen Lee told CNN."

Quote: "The volcano, 50 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of Guatemala City, was belching 'fiery clouds' over the course of the day, said David de Leon, a spokesman for the government's disaster response office. The danger warning issued by the government was one step short of a declaration of emergency requiring evacuation of the communities around the volcano. He said the mountain has been shaken by explosions that have rattled windows and rooftops and spewed columns of ash to some (5,000) 15,000 feet above sea level."

Quote: "Kim added: “I can confidently say that this is some kind of a dolphin. However, it has fur. It’s unusual. Dolphins do not have any fur.'"

Note: Maybe it's MOSTLY dolphin but also partly something else that DOES have fur. In other words, a genetic chimera, a blending of two species, similar to the sheep that have been born with human-ish faces in recent years...

5 comments:

Fascinating report Jonny. Collapsylvania - now with self-collapsing building technology! They're smokin' in Shamokin! Our state capital is riddled with sinkholes and they don't have the money to fix them.

The Chevrolet box van was packed with fireworks and had ignited along southbound Interstate 15 Thursday near the Nevada border shortly before 1:30 p.m., burning to the ground on the side of a Southern California freeway and clogging the main artery between Los Angeles and Las Vegas for hours.

As Alaska burns, Anchorage sets new records for heat and lack of snowhttp://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/capital-weather-gang/wp/2015/07/02/amid-months-of-record-warmth-anchorage-officially-ends-its-least-snowy-year/

Fear of volcano eruption in Manipur's Ukhrul district as continuous flow of ashes, smoke eminate from village swamp http://www.sott.net/article/298616-Fear-of-volcano-eruption-in-Manipurs-Ukhrul-district-as-continuous-flow-of-ashes-smoke-eminate-from-village-swamp

Delta's unretired NWA Boeing 747 makes emergency landing in IrelandThe ex-Northwest Airlines Boeing 747 that was unretired by Delta Air Lines Inc. this week made an emergency landing due to a smoke alarm Friday.

[their other plane is the one that got destroyed by hail in China - rotsa ruck!]

The world’s oceans are in trouble. And when it comes to saving them, there’s only one choice to be made: either we significantly cut greenhouse gas emissions, or we don’t.

A new review published in the journal Science by an international team of researchers joins the many calling attention to the grave risks facing our marine systems, and emphasizes the need for a rapid and significant response. Building on the major report released last year by the International Panel on Climate Change, it highlights the way climate change will have “great impacts” on the oceans’ “fundamental physics and chemistry,” with grave consequences that will be experienced “across all latitudes.” [more]